Yasmin

Why Does Yaz Get a Pass?

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In the early days of hormonal birth control, many physicians and politicians seemed extraordinarily indifferent to the side effects linked to the magic little pill, and world-renowned neurologist, Dr. David Clark could not hide his dismay. He lamented incredulously that it was as if The Pill had been granted some sort of “diplomatic immunity.”

In those days, when you referred to “The Pill,” you meant Enovid. It represented the only formulation – the only brand of hormonal birth control available. Yet, despite the limited exposure, specialists from many fields had already begun to sound alarm bells. They witnessed healthy, young women suddenly experiencing unusual outcomes, such as depression, lupus, and strokes. Unfortunately, those outcomes are not so unusual or uncommon today.

Now, a variety of methods deliver the potent drugs: patches, implants, injections, and even the IUD. We are nearly a quarter of a century into the fourth generation of progestins, while the estrogenic component of combination birth control has never changed. It is still the same ethinyl estradiol first tested by Nazi scientists on concentration camp prisoners as a means of chemical sterilization.

You would think that, with all the current options for birth control, if one method or one formulation stood out as particularly egregious, the diplomatic immunity for that specific method might be waived. I wrote previously about how the Depo injection still seems to enjoy protected status despite having some pretty serious flaws above and beyond other forms of birth control.

But surely the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) would respond differently if a new version of the same old combo pill presented more worrisome problems, right?

Checkered Record

Yasmin hit the market in 2001, and Yaz followed in 2006. Both featured a new synthetic steroid, a fourth generation progestin called drospirenone. Bayer tagged the new formulations with the slogan “Beyond birth control” because they claimed that, beyond pregnancy prevention, this new generation provided a solution for those suffering from acne and/or premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD).

However, controversy began to enshroud the new drugs before Yaz even came to market. In 2003, the FDA notified the drug’s makers that their advertisements for Yasmin were misleading because their claim that it was more effective than other brands was unsubstantiated. Perhaps even worse, these ads failed to warn that the new formulation could elevate a user’s potassium to dangerous levels.

Shortly after the release of Yaz, the FDA began sending similar notifications. First came the same warning about exaggerated claims of efficacy. Then, they took issue with Yaz’s marketing that implied it treated PMDD and acne.

After discovering internal emails from Bayer executives discussing how they could get TV talkshow doctors to promote these “off label benefits,” it appeared that the FDA was finished playing games. They issued a recall of Yaz and Yasmin – well, sort of.

I Don’t Recall the Recall?

It was the most confusing recall ever. In the aftermath, even CBS news ran a story with the headline, “Did You Know the FDA Recalled Bayer’s Yaz Contraceptive? Neither Did Anyone Else.”

Something much more sinister than marketing misinformation and misleading semantics triggered the recall. Instead, the recall process was triggered because clinical trial data submitted to the FDA during the approval process had been tweaked to downplay the drug’s elevated risk of blood clots. Bayer took their data and averaged certain measurements to get the numbers they needed.

By 2009, blood clot lawsuits had begun to pile up. The French drug safety agency, ANSM would ultimately release findings that the new pills were responsible for twice as many deaths as previous generations of hormonal birth control. Other studies found that these drugs could be as much as three times more likely to cause blood clots than the already elevated risk of other birth control brands. By 2016, Bayer would pay out over $2 billion to settle more than 10,000 blood clot related lawsuits.

The FDA rarely takes action against any form of birth control, but they finally moved forward with the recall. The only problem was they buried it in the “Enforcement Report” section of their website instead of where recalls are normally posted. Even more confusing was the recall itself. Despite having raised concerns about dubious practices during the approval process, the recall seemed to focus on quality control issues at a particular factory in Germany. Ultimately, the recall only targeted approximately 33,000 boxes of Yaz and 122,000 boxes of the generic version, Ocella.

The Choice of a New Generation

Recall or not, it did not take long for the new birth control formulation to become one of Bayer’s top performers. The various brands associated with the new progestin brought in over $1.5 billion in sales in 2010, and the company’s profits increased by double digits.

All the while, the FDA compounded the confusion by continuing their investigation into the increased incidence of blood clots and mortality associated with drospirenone. By 2011, the scrutiny intensified as new studies showed that women on this combination were 74% more likely to suffer blood clots than other forms.

The insanity of the the mixed messages became equally intense. As the FDA’s advisory committee on drospirenone moved toward a plan of action, the agency suddenly disqualified Dr. Sidney Wolfe, the respected Director of Public Citizen, from the committee because of his “intellectual conflict of interest.” In other words, he had already expressed disapproval for this drug based on its poor safety record.

It would be hard to exaggerate the absurdity of this move. Our first thought might be to equate this to a juror being dismissed for coming into a trial with a biased prejudice against the defendant, but pharmaceuticals are NOT innocent until proven guilty! In fact, the burden of proof for both safety and efficacy is supposed to fall on the drug companies from the outset.

The FDA should never remove a qualified doctor from a committee for having pre-conceived, scientifically sound opinions about the drug in question.

A Toothless Penance

When the dust settled, the FDA ruled that Bayer needed to change the verbiage in the clunky patient information pamphlet that nobody reads anyway. But hey, at least it’s in there, so when more families look to sue Bayer for the loss of their daughter, Bayer can claim they were warned. It’s right there in black and white.

The temptation exists to think this entire situation perfectly portrays the ineptitude of a large governmental bureaucracy – incompetence run amok. Maybe they got sidetracked by the QC issues at the plant in Germany, but they hung with it and eventually forced Bayer to publish information about the elevated risks. Could we have really expected anything more from the jack-wagons at the FDA? I think we could have (and should have). 

While it isn’t exactly a heroic example of consumer advocacy, the FDA did demonstrate a little more chutzpah when it came to another drug around the same time.

An Alternative NSAID

In 1999, Merck released a new drug to treat osteoarthritis. Primed to compete against Naproxen, a popular NSAID commonly known by the brand name, Aleve, Merck believed their new product, Vioxx, held a distinct advantage because they were convinced that it would cause less gastrointestinal issues than Aleve.

Eager to accentuate this key differentiator, they launched a massive study of 8,000 patients in January that same year. The Vioxx gastrointestinal outcomes research (VIGOR) study kicked off with points of comparison focused on gastric perforations, ulcers, and bleeds.

Things looked promising when the VIGOR data and safety monitoring panel (DSMP) made their first report to the FDA in October. Soon, they would publish the encouraging results in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). Vioxx patients did indeed exhibit fewer ulcers and less gastrointestinal bleeding, but upon closer inspection, all those green pastures would be revealed to be astroturf.

The following month the DSMP admitted that nearly twice as many Vioxx patients in the study died from cardiovascular events than Naproxen patients, but they contended that the numbers were still low and voted to continue the trial. Without any evidence to back it up, the DSMP suggested that, rather than Vioxx contributing to cardiac issues, perhaps Naproxen provided a protective effect similar to aspirin that brought their numbers down.

Follow the Money

Much like Bayer with Yaz, it was later discovered that Merck took a little creative license with the numbers they presented to the FDA. The researchers took the highly unusual step of recording gastrointestinal events after they stopped recording cardiovascular events. By moving the goalpost for one and not the other, they were able to generate numbers that were much more favorable to Vioxx than what was reality.

Slowly, details of the unsettling truth behind Vioxx came to light. However, since we are talking about medicine and government agencies, we could just as accurately say that they came to light rather quickly.

In early 2000, Michael Weinblatt, the Chairman of the Vioxx DSMP filled out a disclosure form, where he admitted to owning $70,000 in Merck stock. Later that same month, he signed a lucrative new consulting contract with them.

Over the next year, news of at least three previously unreported heart attacks from among the Vioxx users in the study came to light – as did their clunky attempts to cover them up.

In February 2001, the FDA committed to transparency after holding an advisory board meeting related to the Vioxx trials. They sent a warning letter to Merck about their misrepresentation of the drug, and their attempts to downplay its higher risk of causing a stroke.

The agency subsequently published the entire database from the VIGOR study on their website. This allowed researchers outside Merck’s sphere of influence to perform a meta-analysis of the data, which ultimately knocked the wind out of the hypothesis regarding Naproxen’s protective affect on the heart.

Unlike their approach with Yaz and Bayer, the FDA’s charges against Merck and Vioxx were direct, clear, and well publicized. Their release of the entire VIGOR database left the company vulnerable.

As more evidence began to mount, Merck’s researchers wiped the egg off their faces and published a correction in NEJM. By September 2004, after continued intense pressure from the FDA, Merck decided to withdraw Vioxx from the market.

As the final bit of dust settled four years later, Merck settled thousands of heart attack and death lawsuits for $4.85 billion.

Corporate Conscience?

Ultimately, the downfall of Vioxx precipitated from the fact that there was already a safer drug on the market that met the same need. If Naproxen did not exist, it is entirely possible that the FDA would have determined that Vioxx’s benefits outweighed the risks and allowed it to remain on the shelves.

So, what about Yaz and Yasmin, for which there are numerous safer alternatives? 

After the clunky recall and the required changes in patient information literature, the FDA acted as if it had done its job. When it came to Vioxx, it was ultimately Merck that decided to pull the product from the shelves after coercion from the FDA. Is it possible that Bayer would demonstrate a similar level of corporate conscience?

Believe it or not, this is where the story gets truly interesting, and it flew below my radar for years, until a young woman reached out to me to share her story. For the sake of telling it here, I will refer to her as Sara.

Sara’s Story

As the daughter of two physicians, Sara grew up feeling like the ultimate guinea pig. Since birth, with every symptom or vaguest sign of a symptom, one of her parents always seemed to have a sample drug from the office to try.

As she grew into the age of reason, she resented the perpetual overmedication. While she did not become anti-medicine, she did avoid running to pharmaceuticals with every sniff, cough, and tummy ache. She also vowed to be much more diligent about the chemicals she put in her body. She researched side effects for herself anytime a doctor proposed a new prescription.

Oddly, the same attention to detail did not apply when it was time to start birth control. Like so many women, in her mind, it was almost like hormonal birth control was not a drug. Her doctor prescribed Yaz, and she took it for a while with minimal side effects. 

After a couple of years, Sara happened upon information about the questionable recall and concerns about the elevated risk of blood clots. She scheduled an appointment with her ObGyn and told him about her trepidation with continuing on Yaz. He listened empathetically and said he had some good news. He assured her that after so many questions had been raised, Bayer came out with a new, safer formula, called Beyaz.

Elated, Sara started the new prescription. Again, it took a couple of years for her natural pharmaceutical skepticism to activate, but it finally did. It did not take too much digging for her to discover that Beyaz was actually the exact same synthetic steroids at the exact same dosage as Yaz. The only difference – Bayer added a touch of folate.

Sara was outraged.

Why Beyaz?

Bayer claimed the inclusion of folate within the hormonal birth control would help reduce the risk of neural tube defects in case of any pregnancies that might happen while taking the drug.

Even NPR was confused by this “creative” twist on birth control, noting,

Like other modern birth control pills, Beyaz is 99 percent effective. But now the company can tell women their babies are less likely to have certain kinds of serious birth defects, if the pill fails to work for them.

Indeed, this must have presented a nearly impossible quandary for the marketing department. How do pitch a drug that offers benefits to the baby that it is supposed to prevent?

Everything about this enigmatic new formulation inspires questions beginning with why it was even necessary. There is a feasible explanation.

Bayer introduced Beyaz in late 2010 during the height of the fallout over Yaz’s elevated risks. One would have to be truly special to not at least entertain the notion that Beyaz was a strategic response to the bad news cycle.

Sold as Safer

It would be conjecture for me to suggest that Bayer trained their sales reps to tell doctors that the new drug resolved any problems swirling around Yaz. What isn’t conjecture though is that many doctors have been telling women who raise concerns about Yaz that Beyaz is Bayer’s safer alternative.

Sara reached out to me because she had joined several birth control groups on Facebook and found many other women who had a similar experience. They went to their doctor expressing concerns about Yaz and were prescribed Beyaz with the narrative that Bayer had created it as a safer alternative.

It’s possible that when you compare and contrast Vioxx and Yaz it reveals a difference in the two companies. After all, one company pulled their drug from the market, while the other, not only didn’t remove their drug from the market, but doubled-down with a devious new twist on their killer drug. 

I think it has more to do with the difference between the two drugs being a pain reliever versus hormonal birth control. Both drugs gained FDA approval based on dubious data. In safety studies, each drug performed poorly against competing drugs that were already on the market. And the companies making both drugs paid billions of dollars to settle outstanding lawsuits. In the end, the pain reliever was removed from shelves, while the birth control formulation and all its sister products remain on the market all these years later.

For me, it represents one more example in a long line of curious situations over the past 60 years that seem to affirm that birth control has, in fact, been granted diplomatic immunity – consequences be damned.

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Image by Fathromi Ramdlon from Pixabay.

Pill Bleeds Are Not Periods

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The Pill is not just contraception anymore. It has become standard treatment for everything from acne to endometriosis to irregular periods. Yes, hormonal birth control can mask symptoms, but it cannot “regulate” hormones or periods in any meaningful way.

Hormonal birth control does not augment or regulate hormones. Instead, it suppresses ovarian function and shuts down hormones completely. It replaces endogenous hormones with synthetic steroids, and that’s not good enough for women’s health. Real hormones have many benefits for health that synthetic steroids simply cannot deliver.

Real Hormones versus Synthetic Hormones

Our real endogenous hormones are estradiol and progesterone. In contrast, synthetic steroids are ethinylestradiol, levonorgestrel, drospirenone, and many others. Real hormones and synthetic steroids are similar molecules, but they’re not identical and as a consequence, synthetic steroid have many different effects on the body, some of which we are only now beginning to understand.

For example, estradiol improves insulin sensitivity. Its synthetic counterpart ethinylestradiol impairs insulin sensitivity [1] (which is one of the ways the Pill causes weight gain). Progesterone is beneficial for hair, brain health, and bone density, but its synthetic analogues  levonorgestrel, drospirenone, and medroxyprogesterone have quite different effects. They cause hair loss, depression [2], and reduced bone density.  Moreover, the drospirenone progestin found in the Yaz, Yasmin and Ocella series of birth control pills, increases the risk of heart attack and stroke six fold. Its modified shape blocks what are called the mineralocorticoid receptors. These receptors are responsible for salt and water balance (think swelling) and blood pressure.

The only way that ethinylestradiol and progestins are similar to real hormones is that they induce a uterine bleed. They can even induce it monthly, but only if they’re dispensed that way.

Why Bleed?

Who really cares about a bleed for its own sake? If women can’t have real hormones, then why have a monthly bleed at all? It is merely to give the appearance of a period, and reassure women that they’ve had a period (when they haven’t). A bleed does prevent excess build-up of the uterine lining, but it does not have to be monthly. It can be quarterly or yearly or any time we withdraw from the synthetic steroids. Regardless of when we choose to bleed, the pill bleed is not the same as menstruation. Remember, the purpose of oral contraceptives is to block ovulation and prevent pregnancy. Without ovulation, our bodies do not produce endogenous hormones. Indeed, as any woman who has gone off of the pill after a long period of usage will tell you, it takes some time for ovulation and hormone production to begin again.

Normalizing our Periods: A Myth

Interestingly, the “regulation” of periods was the Pill’s earliest cover story. When the Pill was first developed, it could not be sold as contraception because contraception was not legal. Instead, the Pill was ostensibly prescribed to “normalize” periods. “Normalize” was a quaint euphemism which really just meant to be “not pregnant” (wink-wink).

Five decades later, and the Pill’s early cover story has now taken hold as a kind of weird counterfeit reality. Doctors readily prescribe oral contraceptives for all manner of female reproductive disorders, the most common of which is to ‘normalize’ the menstrual cycle. What they, and most women, fail to realize is that the monthly bleed precipitated by the withdrawal of synthetic steroids, is not a real period. It is simply a withdrawal bleed.

It’s time to end it. It’s time to bring back real periods.

There Is Another Way

As a naturopathic doctor working in women’s health for twenty years, I want my patients to have real periods. More precisely, I want them to have a follicular phase and make estradiol. I want them to ovulate, so they can then have a luteal phase and make progesterone. In short, I want my patients to make real hormones and to enjoy their many benefits.

There’s another reason I want my patients to have real periods. A healthy, regular period tells me that all is well with her underlying health. If a woman does not have healthy periods, then I keep working with her until she does. We use her period as a helpful, useful marker guiding her health decisions. We think of it as her monthly report card.

It’s not always easy to restore healthy periods, but it can be done. But with a little perseverance, natural treatments such as diet, supplement and herbs work well, and they give women what they deserve: A real period rather than a pharmaceutically induced bleed.

Real Risk Study: Birth Control and Blood Clots

Lucine Health Sciences and Hormones Matter are conducting research to investigate the relationship between hormonal birth control and blood clots. If you or a loved one have suffered from a blood clot while using hormonal birth control, please consider participating. We are also looking for participants who have been using hormonal birth control for at least one year and have NOT had a blood clot, as well as women who have NEVER used hormonal birth control. For more information or to participate, click here.

References

  1. Kojima T et al. Insulin sensitivity is decreased in normal women by doses of ethinyl estradiol used in oral contraceptives. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1993 Dec;169(6):1540-4. PMID: 8267059
  2. Kulkarni J et al. Depression associated with combined oral contraceptives–a pilot study. Aust Fam Physician. 2005 Nov;34(11):990. PMID: 16299641

High Blood Pressure in Women: Could Progesterone be to Blame?

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High blood pressure develops for a number of reasons, with poor diet, lack of exercise and medication key contributors to chronic hypertension. Explaining high blood pressure in young, otherwise active, athletic and healthy individuals is difficult at best, but when the blood pressure seems to wax and wane for no obvious reason, diagnosing and treating this form of hypertension can be downright impossible.

This is where an good percentage of the female population find themselves; with treatment refractory high blood pressure, that worsens across the menstrual cycle, during pregnancy and in response to certain formulations of oral contraceptives. Unbeknownst to many of these women and their doctors, they are carriers of a genetic mutation that raises their blood pressure relative to circulating progesterone concentrations. For these women, when progesterone concentrations are high, as during the luteal phase of menstrual cycle, and especially during pregnancy, blood pressure skyrockets uncontrollably. When progesterone concentrations are low and provided lifestyle variables are in check, blood pressure is more manageable.

Mineralocorticoids and Blood Pressure

Blood pressure is controlled in large part by what is called the mineralocorticoid system. This is a set of both steroid and peptide hormones that interact with the vasculature and the kidneys to increase or decrease blood flow. The mineralocorticoid hormone receptors are at the center of this system. Binding to these receptors is the mineralocorticoid hormone called aldosterone. Aldosterone regulates salt homeostasis and whether the kidneys store salt and water or release it.

Sensors within the kidneys monitor sodium concentrations. When there is not enough salt, they release the peptide hormones renin and then angiotensin I and II. The renin-angiotensin system then activates the release of the steroid hormone aldosterone. Aldosterone binds to the mineralocorticoid receptors and signals the kidney to reabsorb more salt. More water is also reabsorbed, and with those changes, plasma volume increases. Increased plasma volume, increases vascular volume which in turn requires a higher cardiac output. Increased cardiac output then leads increased blood pressure. The reverse is also true, decrease salt reabsorption and we get hypotension or low blood pressure.

Regulating Blood Pressure

At every junction there can be errors or mutations in this system and compensatory reactions to environmental or dietary changes. Add those possibilities to the variety of other factors that control blood pressure (baroreceptors, natriutetic peptides, kinin-kallikrein, adrenergic receptors, nitric oxide and endothelin) and it is easy to see why hypertension is sometimes difficult to manage. Women, however, have the added bonus of constantly changing hormone concentrations, across the menstrual cycle, pharmaceutically, across pregnancy and across menopause. Since the mineralocorticoid receptors, like all steroid hormone receptors, bind promiscuously to a bunch of different hormones, it is easy to see how drastically changing hormone concentrations can impact salt and water homeostasis (premenstrual swelling, pregnancy swelling, oral contraceptive swelling), and ultimately, blood pressure. Add a little stress to this mix and we have a recipe for hypertension. Indeed, it should be noted that both cortisol, the stress hormone, and progesterone, bind more strongly to the mineralocorticoid receptor than aldosterone.

Progesterone Binds to Mineralocorticoid Receptors

Progesterone, the reproductive hormone that prepares the endometrium for implantation during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and supports the pregnancy once underway, binds to mineralocorticoid receptor. The relationship between progesterone and blood pressure is complex, but mostly progesterone blocks the mineralocorticoid receptors and lowers blood pressure. In some women, however, the shape of the mineralocorticoid receptor is altered, allowing for increased progesterone binding in such a way that it activates the signals sent from the receptor. So rather than block the mineralocorticoid-aldosterone pathway, it launches it. Progesterone then becomes the conduit for increasing salt and water retention and increasing blood pressure.

Progesterone and High Blood Pressure

For women who carry this gain-of-function mineralocorticoid receptor mutation, high blood pressure emerges early, before the age of 20 and, for all intents and purposes, is refractory to the normal lifestyle changes and many medications that reduce blood pressure, except perhaps diuretics. The high blood pressure often becomes severe during pregnancy. It may also become severe with any drug that increases progesterone or decreases aldosterone including with oral contraceptives, synthetic progestins (medroxyprogesterone, micronized progesterone, prempro and related), and blood pressure medications that block aldosterone (spironolactone) and are derived from 17a- spirolactone. Fourth generation progestin, contraceptives or hormone replacement therapies (HRT) containing drospirenone are particularly dangerous, as they both bind to progesterone receptors strongly and block mineralocortiocoid activity simultaneously.

It should be noted that boys and men also carry this mutation and are susceptible to early onset hypertension.

The Problem with Progesterone Mediated Blood Pressure

The problem with progesterone mediated high blood pressure is one of recognition. High blood pressure in general is not recognized in young women. Blood pressure mediated by progesterone concentrations, whether via endogenous and menstrually-related changes or the use of synthetic progestins, is all but completely unrecognized. Genetic testing in this population is unheard of. Consequently, many young women are at risk for cardiac and thromboembolic events and do not know it. Could the sudden deaths reported in association with drosperinone oral contraceptives be related to unrecognized gain of function mineralocorticoid mutations? Possibly.

During pregnancy, the risk is magnified exponentially as progesterone concentrations increase several hundred fold. Hypertension accounts for 6% of all pregnancy complications, one wonders what percentage are related to progesterone? No one knows, because it is not studied.

For older women, though blood pressure is routinely monitored, connections between synthetic progestins in HRT and blood pressure elevations may only be cursorily understood, leaving many women open to inadvertently increasing their risk for heart attack and stroke coincident with attempts to manage menopausal symptoms. Although, hormones naturally decline during menopause, the re-supplementation of progesterone and progestins can be problematic for these women.

Fourth Generation Progestins: The Dangers of Drospirenone

For women with the gain of function mutation, certain forms of oral contraceptives and HRT can be deadly. The 4th generation progestins contained the Yas, Yasmin, Ocella series of birth control pills and in the Angeliq brand of HRT, are derived from a synthetic progestin that blocks the mineralocorticoid receptor directly.

Drospirenone is a progestin and mineralocorticoid antagonist derived from 17a- spirolactone. 17a- spirolactone blocks aldosterone. Under normal circumstances, blocking aldosterone’s ability to bind with mineralocorticoid receptors might be a good thing and reduce high blood pressure, particularly in folks who have aldosterone based hypertension or who are in heart failure. In other populations, however, blocking aldosterone might not be such a great idea.

Drospirenone based oral contraceptives and HRT formulations contain progestins that bind with equal affinity to the progesterone receptor compared to endogenous progesterone, but bind 500X more strongly to the mineralocorticoid receptors  than aldosterone. This is problematic for most women, even if they don’t carry the gain-of-function mutation. Drospirenone based contraceptives increase the rate of serious cardiovascular events by as much as 6X compared to the older contraceptives. In women who carry the gain of function mineralocorticoid receptor mutation, taking a drosperinone based oral contraceptive or menopausal replacement therapy, the results can be deadly.

Drospirenone – Mineralocorticoid Receptor Connection

If one has the gain of function mutation, where the mineralocorticoid receptors preferentially bind with progesterone and its metabolites, blocking what remaining aldosterone controlled feedback loops of salt/water balance, skews the receptor activity in such a way that it is always on, and always telling the kidneys to reabsorb more salt and water. Similarly, increasing progesterone concentrations unnaturally, with drosperinone, or any other progestin, quantitatively increases binding with the mineralocorticoid receptors, displacing aldosterone, removing important feedback controls and creating a state of perpetual progestin-mineralocorticoid activation.

Epigenetic Factors in Blood Pressure

Environmental toxicants and pharmaceuticals induce what are called epigenetic changes in protein expression. Epigenetic means beyond genetics. These types of changes don’t alter DNA per se, just alter whether a certain protein codes are activated or deactivated. There are number technical mechanisms by which epigenetic variables can alter receptor expression and function. For other receptors, especially the glucocorticoid and estrogen receptors, many of these epigenetic mechanisms have been elucidated. Not so for the mineralocorticoid receptors. Certainly, with environmental exposures, which are all endocrine disrupting in some manner or another, it is possible to create constitutively open mineralocorticoid receptors, much like the gain of function mutations. This would mean that millions of women could be a great risk when using drospirenone based oral contraceptives or HRT, progesterone increasing or mimicing drugs (most oral contraceptives and HRT), aldosterone blocking agents from spirolactone and during pregnancy. Even across the menstrual cycle, blood pressure would be expected to wax and wane relative to circulating progesterone concentrations.

Final Thoughts

Maybe it is time to move beyond the one hormone, one receptor, one function view of endocrinology. It’s certainly time to address the role of cycling hormones on human physiology. Cycling progesterone concentrations impact blood pressure; recognizing this simple fact would help women and their physicians develop more reasonable and effective approaches to managing high blood pressure.

 

 

The Yasmin Chronicles: Bad Medicine, Big Money and Bayer

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Perhaps you’ve heard of the Yasmin line (Yaz, Ocella, GIanvi, Loryna, Beyaz, Safyral and Zarah) of birth control pills. For a while they were some of the most highly promoted, highly prescribed on the market. Indeed, they were so highly promoted, Bayer, the manufacturer was slapped with not one, not two, but three warning letters by the FDA for mismarketing this contraceptive, specifically suggesting the drug could be used to treat PMS and acne, when it had been approved for neither. Bayer was also cited for downplaying and failing to communicate the risks of these contraceptives. Though Bayer eventually changed their lifestyle ads promoting Yaz and Yasmin, the damage was already done. The perception that these pills were safer and more effective than older birth control pills was cemented in the minds of physicians and patients worldwide and Bayer had garnered 18% of the coveted birth control market share. A mere 100 million women worldwide use oral contraceptives daily. With the Yasmin line, however, there is 3-fold increase of thrombo-embolitic events over the already high risk associated with the older birth control pills. Compared to women not taking oral contraceptives, the risk for these side effects is 6-fold higher; risks not to be taken lightly.

What Makes the Yasmin Line so Dangerous?

The Yasmin line of contraceptives contain the fourth generation progestin, drosperinone. Unlike previous generations of synthetic progestogens (progesterone-like compounds) derived from testosterone, drosperinone is a completely different animal. Drosperinone is analog for a common drug called Spironolactone (Aldactone),an aldosterone receptor antagonist that tells the kidneys to remove water and salt from the body. It’s a diuretic used to treat hypertension, congestive heart failure, kidney disease and cirrhosis of the liver.

Spironolactone comes with a serious list of side effects, including a condition called hyperkalemia or high potassium levels. Unregulated potassium levels, either too high or too low can cause serious heart rhythm irregularities leading to death, and so, physicians are advised to monitor potassium levels in patients using Spironolactone. Have any young woman using either Sprionolactone or Yasmin ever had potassium levels measured? Nope.

Additional side effects of spironolactone include: GI bleeds and gastritis, agranulocytosis, urticaria, maculopapular or erythematous cutaneous rashes, anaphylactic reactions, vasculitis, mental confusion, ataxia, headache, drowsiness, lethargy, renal dysfunction and Stevens Johnson Syndrome; perhaps not something one wants to give to otherwise healthy young women. Indeed, sprironolactone was prescribed for young women with acne, before becoming a birth control pill and then prescribed along with its analog, Yasmin, rather cavalierly.

Drosperinone is a spironolactone analog, meaning drosperinone binds to and blocks the aldosterone receptor just as spironolactone. In fact, binding affinity studies comparing Yasmin to the older generations of contraceptives, showed that it has 500X the anti-mineralocorticoid (aldosterone receptor) binding affinity of the other contraceptives and is equivalent to the 25mg dose of spironolactone. So, from that information alone, one might prescribe this pill a little bit more judiciously, but when we remember that Yasmin is a combination oral contraceptive that comes a dose of ethinyl estradiol, the synthetic estrogen rife with its own side effects (blood clots and stroke), caution should have prevailed. It didn’t, and many women were injured, likely more so that we know of.

Yasmin Lawsuits

Deep vein thrombosis. As of early 2014, Bayer has settled $1.69 billion in lawsuits for deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolisms related to Yasmin. These included over 8000 claimants. Yet to be settled, over 4000 suits remain and likely many more as publicity and recognition of the side-effects increase. It’s important to note that, like with most drug settlements, the pharmaceutical company admits no blame, simply pays the settlements and continues with business as usual.

Gallbladder. Gallbladder disease was recently recognized as side effect, and though, Bayer initially denied a relationship, they are now settling cases there too. Only here, the amounts are paltry in comparison. Bayer has set aside $24 million for gallbladder cases; $2000 per case for disease and $3000 per case when gallbladder removal was necessitated. Currently, there are approximately 8000 of these cases pending. Whether more will emerge is unclear.

Stroke. Most recently in Zapalski vs. Aniol et al, a jury awarded Mariola Zapalski $14 million in a suit against her physician for failing to recognize and warn about the risks of Yasmin. Ms. Zapalski suffered a severe stroke two just weeks after her doctor prescribed Yasmin. She suffered permanent brain damage and now requires 24 hour per day medical care. Compared to the class settlements that range approximately $200,000 per claimant and likely include similarly disabled women, the $14 million is significantly higher. To my knowledge, this represents the first case, outside the class-action cases, against an individual physician for failing to recognize and warn of risk. This may be a new trend, but it is too early to tell.

Why is Yasmin Still on the Market?

Money, pure and simple. As I have reported previously,

The Yasmin line of birth control is one of Bayer’s most lucrative product lines with over 4 million women taking these pills monthly in the US alone. Even with the negative publicity surrounding for these products, revenue for the Yasmin line of products neared 1.1 billion for the first nine months of 2012. After 11 years on the market, total revenue for these products was likely well over $10 billion. If the company pays out $1-2 billion in claims, but makes $10-15 billion, the cost-benefit ratio is skewed in favor of maintaining their market presence. The fines become just another cost of doing business.

What about the FDA?

It goes without saying that the FDA has limited power or interest in regulating these drugs. Particularly where women’s health is concerned, the FDA has exhibited an egregious lack of regulation extending back to the DES tragedies and just about every drug or device marketed towards women since. With Yasmin specifically, attempts to include a black box warning on Yasmin were foiled by industry insiders in 2011, despite the medical experts arguing in favor of the warnings. For more details see: The High Cost of Bad Birth Control.

What Should You Do?

As with any medication, it is up to the patient to understand the risks. Do your homework, read the research, make your decision based on the data not the marketing. Drosperinone based contraceptives may not be worth the risk.

Participate in Oral Contraceptive Research – Take a Survey

If you have ever taken oral contraceptives, please take a few minutes to complete this important, anonymous, online survey about oral contraceptives. We’ve had over 800 women complete the survey so far.

You do not have to be currently using oral contraceptives to complete the survey.  Please share the link among all your female friends and family. We’re relying on the power of women and social media to help make this survey a success. The Oral Contraceptives Survey. 

Bees, Birth Control and Bayer

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Cool things happen in the world of social networking and hyper-connectivity – previously disparate movements become connected and cross-pollinated. My post: Look Beyond Access – Demand Safe Birth Control was picked up by an environmentalist, active in the #BoycottBayer movement. It seems Bayer has an extended history of unleashing dangerous chemicals on the world and other egregious business practices dating back to before World War I. If there ever was a chemical company to boycott, Bayer just might be the one – maybe even a little worse than Monsanto and that is a high standard of callousness.

Most recently, Bayer is the purveyor of the most dangerous birth control options on the market – the Yasmin line or oral contraceptives, the frequently dislodging and vaginal tearing Mirena (no one has measured the hormone side-effects yet) and the just released and repackaged version of Mirena – Skyla. Repeated billion dollar class action lawsuits are just the cost of doing business, I guess.   According to financial reporting, their profits are down because:

Bayer faces lawsuits in the United States from women claiming the contraceptive caused blood clots that led to serious health consequences. Otherwise the [financial] picture was brighter. – silly women.

Imagine my surprise when I learn that Bayer may also be responsible for the collapse of honey bee colonies worldwide – social networks are cool.

Lest you think honey bees are of no import to health, think again. Without honey bees we have no agriculture – no food. Killing the honey bees is serious business, something only the most unscrupulous and short-sighted corporation would do, but that is exactly what Bayer and its ally Syngenta (formed by the merger of Novartis Agribusiness and Zeneca (AstraZeneca) Agrochemicals) are doing. They are killing honeybees. Although, they disagree vehemently and their own, company sponsored research supports their benevolence, health organizations and governments worldwide are beginning to ban the use of these pesticides and genetically modified seeds.

Not so in the US. We seem to wait generations before making the appropriate moves (remember DES) or at least until the same chemical company can introduce a ‘treatment’ for what they caused initially. Gotta love me some unbridled capitalism without tether to ethics or morals – except some skewed sense of moral hazard.

It’s time. Life and health must come before profits. These chemical companies must be stopped. And since there is no regulatory agency with the teeth to protect our health, we must use the means we have – stop buying their products. Just stop.

Environmentalists save the honeybees, but save human women too. We all should be boycotting Bayer and any other company that dares to poison us for a buck. Spread the word.

 

Look Beyond Access – Demand Safe Birth Control

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Fair warning, this may get ugly. I’m mad. Bayer just announced the next in a long line of dangerous hormonal birth control options the Skyla IUD. Though not much different from the currently embattled and lawsuit ridden Mirena (which tends to dislodge and cause hemorrhage among other things) and likely not much safer than their oral contraceptives – the Yasmin line ($700 million in lawsuit settlements and counting) – women’s health and feminist groups are jumping on the support bandwagon. Now younger women can get a (dangerous) IUD too (Skyla happens to be just a hair smaller than Mirena), yippee.

Wake up, ladies. Medical devices and pharmaceuticals are not shiny new iPads. We cannot blindly support and recommend each and every new product in this market.

The fight to give women access to birth control as a point of equality is dead on and much needed, but ignoring the safety issues and not demanding safer birth control options is just downright negligent. Advertising these birth control options without understanding the serious dangers makes us pawns of pharmaceutical industry and complicit in the deaths and injuries of the women who use these devices and medications.

Women need birth control options. I support that – wholeheartedly. I am a child of the 80s-90s when access to oral contraceptives was unquestioned. Access to birth control allowed me to compete against guys in my chosen sport, allowed me to date, to pursue academic and career goals without worrying about pregnancy.  Easy access to oral contraceptives also, unbeknownst to me, elevated my blood pressure to dangerously high levels, caused progressively worse vertigo and syncope to the point of multiple hospitalizations, tests and desperation. I stopped taking oral contraceptives and all of the symptoms resolved. It wasn’t until years later that I understood the connection.

Like so many others, my physicians and I were blind to the legitimate dangers of hormonal birth control. Sure we’ve all read the package inserts (which are really the tip of the adverse event iceberg), but in a sort of cognitive dissonance we dismiss the side-effects as happening to someone else or as something to be tolerated in exchange for our freedom. Physicians often downplay the dangers hormonal birth control, even today, as more research comes to light.

Imagine, pregnancy versus possible death from cardiac arrest, stroke or a myriad of other adverse events; that is the choice we make daily when using hormonal birth control. We shouldn’t have to make that choice. As educated women and modern feminists we must be able to distinguish between fighting for the absolute right to have access to birth control from a stance that says all birth control options are good and safe. The later is most certainly not the case.

Not all contraceptives are created equal. Some really and truly, should not be on the market. Even among the safer birth control options, there are dangers. We should be fighting for more research, for better and safer birth control options and not promoting each new pill or device that comes on the market. Just because it’s new and the makers say it is safe does not make it so. The pharmaceutical industry has a long history of publishing only positive results for their products (here, here, here) and paying physicians to promote their products. If ever there were a buyer beware, it would be here – with birth control.

Finally, we should be boycotting companies like Bayer who continue to put women’s lives at risk. We boycotted Rush Limbaugh and the Koch brothers for their anti-women statements, why are we not as aggressive when it comes to companies that seriously injure women?  At the very least, we should not be promoting their latest, greatest assault on women’s health. Bayer is the maker of the Yasmin line of birth control, arguably the most dangerous line of oral contraceptives on the market. Bayer is also the maker of Mirena, the hormonal IUD with on-going class action lawsuits due to serious adverse events. Skyla is almost equivalent to Mirena and is simply repackaging and re-branding of that old, soon to be off-patent, dangerous IUD. It is neither new nor innovative and it remains to be seen whether it is any safer.  What are we doing ladies?

Post Script: Hormones MatterTM is taking the safety of birth control into its own hands. We find it unacceptable that the adverse events of many birth control options are poorly understood, that medication interactions are not investigated and that oral contraceptives (like many other medications in women’s health) are regularly prescribed for uses for which there are no data to support their efficacy. We are conducting our first of many studies on oral contraceptives and women’s health issues. If you have ever used oral contraceptives, whether you had any side-effects or not, please take the Oral Contraceptives Survey. Another woman’s life may depend upon it.

About us: We are an unfunded company, committed to improving women’s health through research. We believe so strongly in the need for better research that rather than wait for funding, we’re doing the research anyway.  We are crowdsourcing this research and would be much appreciative if you would also share the link throughout your social media networks.  To take another health survey, click: Take a Health Survey.

To suggest a survey, help create a survey, write a guest post or otherwise get involved: info@hormonesmatter.com

Real Risk Study: Birth Control and Blood Clots

Lucine Health Sciences and Hormones Matter are conducting research to investigate the relationship between hormonal birth control and blood clots. If you or a loved one have suffered from a blood clot while using hormonal birth control, please consider participating. We are also looking for participants who have been using hormonal birth control for at least one year and have NOT had a blood clot, as well as women who have NEVER used hormonal birth control. For more information or to participate, click here.

 

Will the Sunshine Act Curb Pharma Payments to Doctors?

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Just two weeks ago, as part of the Affordable Care Act, the Centers for Medicare and Medicade Services published its final rule on the reporting mandates for physician payments from pharmaceutical and medical device makers. Called the Physician Payment Sunshine Act, this law requires:

applicable manufacturers of drugs, devices, biologicals, or medical supplies covered by Medicare, Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) to report annually to the Secretary certain payments or transfers of value provided to physicians or teaching hospitals (“covered recipients”).

Why Is This Important?

For too many physicians, the medications they choose to prescribe are influenced by these payments. A case control study at a university hospital found that physicians who requested a new drug be added to the formalary were 19X more likely to have received money or gifts from the drug company. According to the New England Journal of Medicine as of 2007 fully 94% of all physicians accepted gifts from pharma, although by 2009, only 84% of physicians accepted gifts from pharma.

In their Dollars for Docs series, Propublica not only detailed the trail of money from the pharmaceutical industry to physicians and the changes in prescribing practices that ensued, but also, found that over 250 of the physicians receiving these payments had been disciplined by their state’s medical boards with the public never the wiser.

Wouldn’t you want to know if your physician was receiving payments to ‘consult’ on a particular drug or medical device? What if that drug or device turned out to be dangerous like, Avandia or Vioxx or in the case of women’s health Yasmin, Yaz or Ocella or even the vaginal mesh implants?  I would. And soon, you will be able to find this information, at least for those physicians that accept medicare or medicade. For the remaining physicians, we’ll have to rely on the stellar, investigative reporting of organizations like Propublica.

What Is the Physician Payment Sunshine Act?

The Physician Payment Sunshine Act mandates payments or ‘transfer of value’ to physicians be reported to the Secretary of Health and Human Services. Collection of this information is set to begin in August with full compliance and reporting expected in 2014.

The cool thing about this act, if it is implemented correctly, is that payment or transfer of value includes money for marketing activities, such as promotional or conference talks and consultation services. It also will include research grants and “charitable” contributions (which usually come with some promotional strings attached), funding to attend conferences, honoraria and royalties and license fees. The pharmaceutical and device companies making these payments will be required to list names, address, amount of payment, date of payment(s) and describe the service for the payment made for anything over $10. The database will be searchable so that patients can determine what monies their physicians received from pharma or device companies.

Where the Sunshine Act Fails

From the original to the final regulations, a work-around for paying physicians to speak at pharma sponsored continuing medical education (CME) events was added. According to the regulations, so long as the sponsoring company doesn’t pay the physician/speaker directly, those fees are acceptable and need not be listed publicly. Instead, the pharma company must pay a third party vendor to arrange and pay the speakers. CME conferences are where most physicians learn the latest drug therapy, device or medical technique. It is unlikely that speakers at these conferences will speak against the sponsor’s product. Funneling the payments through a third party vendor, who is also paid by the sponsor, is no more than a quick pass at laundering the fees.

What Do Physicians Think About the Sunshine Act?

The opinions are mixed, at least publicly. Some physicians are fully behind the new efforts in transparency and have begun their own campaigns to disentangle the marketing relationships between pharma and physicians. The National Physicians Alliance sponsors the Unbranded Doctor campaign:

The National Physicians Alliance’s Unbranded Doctor is unmasking the pharmaceutical industry’s bogus claim that its marketing efforts are just educational ventures for physicians. By signing up physicians to renounce gifts, lecture fees, and “education” from companies, the Alliance is championing objectivity, integrity, and professionalism.

—Jerome Kassirer, MD
former Editor-in-Chief, New England Journal of Medicine

Similarly, the British Medical Journal (BMJ) has positioned itself as a lead proponent of transparency and open data. On the other hand, CME released a survey of over 500 physicians asking if the new regulations to list publicly whether industry sponsored their attendance at CMEs would curtail their attendance. The result was a resounding – yes.

  • 75% of physicians said the disclosure rules would affect their decision to attend at least somewhat.
  • 47%  of physicians said the disclosure rules would affect their decision to attend to a great extent.
  • 46% of CME speakers said the disclosure rule would affect their decision to participate as a panelist or presenter to a great extent
  • 25% percent said it would somewhat affect their participation

Will the Sunshine Act Curb Pharma Payments to Doctors?

Probably not. Unless and until full transparency about medical research, clinical trials and adverse events are made open and accessible to patients and physicians, medical marketing, fabricated data or omitted data, publication bias, and conflicts of interest will continue to pervade our healthcare system. Dangerous medications like the Yasmin suite of birth control pills and unsafe medical devices like J&J’s Gynecare Prolift will remain on the marketplace long after any reasonable person could vouch for their safety.

The Sunshine Act will, however, give patients one more tool to evaluate their physicians and give researchers, investigators and others a way to identify and publicize bad behavior. Who knows, maybe it will even save some money.

To find out if your physician receives money from the pharmaceutical industry go to Dollars for Docs.

We Need Your Help

More people than ever are reading Hormones Matter, a testament to the need for independent voices in health and medicine. We are not funded and accept limited advertising. Unlike many health sites, we don’t force you to purchase a subscription. We believe health information should be open to all. If you read Hormones Matter, like it, please help support it. Contribute now.

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Photo by kike vega on Unsplash.

Photo by Hush Naidoo Jade Photography on Unsplash.

 

 

Going off on the off-label trail

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Did you know that your doctor can send you to the pharmacy with a prescription for an antidepressant, with the goal of helping you stop smoking? Hold on, wait a minute… what? While the average consumer may not be aware of it, off-label use is very common, with up to one-fifth of all drugs prescribed as such according to the April 3, 2008 New England Journal of Medicine. Some of the most common off-label drug uses include the areas of cardiac, anticonvulsants, obstetrics and cancer medicine. Off-label prescriptions occur most often with older, generic medicines that have revealed themselves over time to alleviate additional symptoms or conditions such as:

  • Anti-seizure drugs to treat migraines, depression, nerve pain
  • Antipsychotics to treat Alzheimer’s Disease, autism, dementia, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
  • Antidepressants to treat chronic pain, ADHD, biopolar disorder
  • Antihistamines to treat colds, asthma, ear infection symptoms, as sleep aids

In women’s health, perhaps because many drugs are not designed specifically for women, off-label prescriptions are common. A study published in Archives of Internal Medicine revealed that women received more off-label drugs than men (11.8% vs 9.7%), and was attributed to women being more likely to be treated for problems such as anxiety, nocturnal leg pain, and insomnia, and off-label prescribing is common for these conditions.

Oral contraceptives are prescribed as the first line of treatment for a range of conditions beyond birth control and for which these medications were not approved. Currently, Bayer, the makers of the Yasmin line of birth control, is facing lawsuits for marketing these drugs for lifestyle purposes, PMS and other ailments for which there were no data and the drugs were not approved.

In obstetrics, terbutaline, indomethacin, nefidepine and magnesium sulfate are medications that have been used off-label for years to halt pre-term contractions. None has strong data supporting their efficacy or safety, and this stems from pregnant women being routinely excluded from studies. Thus, most drug treatment during pregnancy is off-label. According to a June 1993 article in Obstetrics and Gynecology, reasons for such off-label use during pregnancy include:

  • Prevention of repetitive abortion
  • Inhibition of premature labor
  • Reduction of fetal or neonatal infection
  • Reduction in development of pre-eclampsia and its complications
  • Ripening of the cervix or induction of labor

What’s the difference between FDA approved labels and non-approved off-labels?

One of the FDA’s primary roles is approving the labeling on a drug; approving what can and cannot be said about the medication. Once the FDA has approved that a drug works and is safe, it works closely with the drug manufacturer to create the drug label, which is a detailed report of specific information about the drug. The FDA-approved drug label is provided to all health professionals who prescribe or sell the drug, and gives information about the drug, its approved doses and instructions on appropriate administration to treat the medical condition(s) for which it was approved.

“Off-label” use is when the drug is used differently from what its label states. This can be when the drug is used for a different disease or medical condition, given in a different way (such as injected versus orally) or given in a different dose than in the approved label. Off-label use is also called “non-approved” or “unapproved” use of a drug, which is not regulated, but is legal in the U.S. and many other countries.

It is legal for doctors to prescribe drugs off-label, but it is not legal for drug companies to market the drug for off-label use. It is important to note that off-label marketing is very different from off-label use, and drug companies can be fined if they promote drugs for uses that have not been approved by the FDA. .

My doctor has prescribed a medication for me –  what should I do?

As always it is our responsibility, as patients to do our homework when it comes to our health and wellness. Here are some tips before venturing off on the off-label trail:

  • Ask your doctor if what they have prescribed is for an approved use, and then verify that information with your pharmacist.
  • Go to the U.S. National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health’s DailyMed site and search for the drug you are considering taking. Click on the “Indications & Usage” tab to see if your condition is listed.
  • If the drug is for off-label use, ask your doctor if there is existing scientific support for your specific condition.
  • Ask your doctor for the reason why they believe the drug will work better off-label than approved drugs.
  • Check that your health insurer covers payments for off-label use as some may require evidence of effectiveness or failure with conventional treatments. This is most often the case with expensive drugs.

Check your medicine cabinet now. Have you already gone off on the off-label trail without knowing it?